Five Questions for John McCain: An Urgent Appeal to the MSM
For all the attention you've lavished on John McCain's Saddleback "victory," not one of you has asked him any of the obvious follow-ups.
In reaction to the torrent of hostile Obama books, my publisher made an early release deal with Amazon, spurring Barnes & Noble to cancel its orders and refuse to stock the book in any of its stores.
For all the attention you've lavished on John McCain's Saddleback "victory," not one of you has asked him any of the obvious follow-ups.
As an ABC-American-Born-Chinese-I had to settle for a less personal sort of honor and pride in "returning" to my family's homeland.
Just like Cheney wearing those beat up loafers on a diplomatic trip to the Middle East, the focus here is not fashion -- it's character.
Reality television show producers proudly note they invented the concept of competing in skimpy outfits for glory and lucrative contracts way before the Olympics did.
Now The Drudge Report seems not only slightly outlandish, but also outmoded; the equivalent of depending on the morning paper for the latest news.
I'm on a public subway now and most people here have no Olympic pins, no tickets and are probably not engaging much with the Olympics each day
Amazon claims to be able to intuit what I would want to read, so why can't it figure out that I don't want a Kindle and actually resent the thing? I am not "platform-agnostic."
Andrew Bacevich never let's you easily and conveniently point the finger at rogue political leaders, showing them as part of the continuum that includes the American citizen.
Basically the new site is much more blue, and the home page tools for getting organized were pushed way down the page. I poked around and don't see much else missing.
Saakashvili told our reporters that "with all the courage I can observe in our troops, nobody would be crazy enough to attack the Russian army, right?" But attack, he did and the Russian Bear was unleashed.
The fact still is that Senator McCain and his campaign lied to a pastor, by agreeing to rules and breaking them, and not telling him until after the fact.
If pundits want to note McCain's maverick moments, fine. He's had some. But it never ceases to amaze me (call me naïve) how this flattering label circulates uncorrected.